osu!
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osu!
Summary
osu! is a video game[1]. osu! ranks in the top 4% of video_game entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (490 views/month).[2]
Key Facts
- osu! was influenced by Osu! Tatakae! Ouendan[3].
- osu! was influenced by Elite Beat Agents[4].
- osu! was influenced by Taiko no Tatsujin[5].
- osu!'s instance of is recorded as video game[6].
- osu!'s instance of is recorded as open-source software[7].
- osu!'s instance of is recorded as esports discipline[8].
- osu!'s instance of is recorded as game[9].
- osu!'s genre is recorded as music video game[10].
- osu!'s genre is recorded as rhythm game[11].
- Osu! Tatakae! Ouendan is named after osu![12].
- osu!'s logo image is recorded as Osu! Logo 2016.svg[13].
- osu!'s logo image is recorded as Osu! logo 2024.png[14].
- osu!'s developer is recorded as Dean Lewis Herbert[15].
- osu!'s developer is recorded as Thomas Müller[16].
- osu!'s developer is recorded as Dan Balasescu[17].
- osu!'s copyright license is recorded as MIT License[18].
- osu!'s programmed in is recorded as Q2370[19].
- osu!'s operating system is recorded as Microsoft Windows[20].
- osu!'s operating system is recorded as Linux[21].
- osu!'s operating system is recorded as macOS[22].
- osu!'s operating system is recorded as Android[23].
- osu!'s operating system is recorded as iOS[24].
- osu!'s operating system is recorded as iPadOS[25].
- osu!'s software version identifier is recorded as 0.0.3[26].
- osu!'s software version identifier is recorded as 0.0.4[27].
Why It Matters
osu! ranks in the top 4% of video_game entities by monthly Wikipedia readership (490 views/month).[2] osu! has Wikipedia articles in 25 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[28] osu! is known by 12 alternative names across languages and contexts.[29]